American Experiment (127 page)

Read American Experiment Online

Authors: James MacGregor Burns

BOOK: American Experiment
10.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

[Schouler concludes that “the remedy is not with us”]:
W. Elliot Brownlee and Mary M. Brownlee,
Women in the American Economy
(Yale University Press, 1976), p. 169.

[“Female fragment societies”]:
Richard D. Brown, “The Emergence of Urban Society in Rural Massachusetts, 1760-1820,”
Journal of American History,
Vol. 61, No. 1 (June 1974), p. 39.

[Emma Willard and the Troy Female Seminary]:
Anne Firor. Scott, “What, Then, Is the American: This New Woman?”
Journal of American History,
Vol. 65, No. 3 (December 1978), pp. 679-703.

[Women at Oberlin]:
Jill K. Conway, “Perspectives on the History of Women’s Education in the United States,”
History of Education Quarterly,
Vol. 14, No. 1 (Spring 1974). pp. 1-11.

[Emergence of women’s rights movement within abolitionism]:
Aileen S. Kraditor,
Means and Ends in American Abolitionism
(Pantheon Books, 1967), pp. 11-39.

[Lucretia Mott and National Anti-Slavery Convention]:
Otelia Cromwell,
Lucretia Mott
(Harvard University Press, 1958), p. 58.

[Exclusion of women from World’s Anti-Slavery Convention]:
Mari Jo and Paul Buhle,
The Concise History of Woman Suffrage
(University of Illinois Press, 1978), pp. 78-87.

[Seneca Falls convention]:
Eleanor Flexner,
Century of Struggle
(Harvard University Press, 1975), Ch. 5.
[Seneca Falls declaration]:
text in Miriam Schneir, ed.,
Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings
(Vintage Books, 1972), pp. 77-82.

[Lucretia Mott]:
Margaret Hope Bacon,
Valiant Friend
(Walker, 1980); Anna Davis Hallowell, ed.,
James and Lucretia Mott, Life and Letters
(Houghton Mifflin, 1884).

[Legal status of wives]:
Richard B. Morris,
Studies in the History of Early American Law
(Columbia University Press, 1930), Ch. 4; Mary R. Beard,
Woman as Force in History
(Macmillan, 1946), pp. 113-21; Peggy Rabkin, “The Origins of Law Reform: The Social Significance of the Nineteenth-Century Codification Movement and Its Contribution to the Passage of the Early Married Women’s Property Acts,”
Buffalo Law Review,
Vol. 24, No. 3 (Spring 1975), pp.683-760; Linda K. Kerber,
Women of the Republic
(University of North Carolina Press, 1980), Ch. 5.

[Difficulty of divorce]:
Kerber, Ch. 6.

[Millicent Hunt]:
diary quoted in Adams, pp. 67-84.

[Lydia Maria Child]:
Patricia G. Holland and Milton Meltzer, eds.,
The Collected Correspondence of Lydia Maria Child, 1817-1880,
Guide and Index to the Microfiche Edition (Kraus Microform, 1980); “Biography of Lydia Maria Child,”
ibid.,
pp. 23-38; Collections of Lydia Maria Child papers and correspondence in the Schlesinger Library, Harvard College, and in the New York Public Library.

[Women’s rights and blacks’ rights]:
see, in general, Gerda Lerner,
The Majority Finds its Past
(Oxford University Press, 1979); Kerber.

[Mehitable Eastman on “hearts to feel”]:
quoted in Vogel, “Hearts to Feel and Tongues to Speak,” p. 64.

Migrants in Poverty

[Frances Wright’s voyage to America]:
Alice J. G. Perkins and Theresa Wolfson,
Francis Wright: Free Enquirer
(Harper & Brothers, 1939), quoted at pp. 26-29.

[Voyage of the
Oxford]: Edwin C. Guillet,
The Great Migration
(Thomas Nelson, 1937), p. 78; Thomas W. Pate, “The Transportation of Immigrants and Reception Arrangements in the Nineteenth Century,”
Journal of Political Economy,
Vol. 19, No. 9 (November 1911), pp. 732-49.

[Reception of immigrants at docks]:
Guillet, pp. 185-86; Nevins, Vol. 2, p. 285.

[Irish emigration after 1835]:
Oscar Handlin,
Boston’s immigrants
(Harvard University Press, 1959), p. 51.
[Statistics on immigration]:
David Ward,
Cities and Immigrants: A Geography of Change in Nineteenth Century America
(Oxford University Press, 1971), p. 63.

[Concentration of immigrants in tenement neighborhoods]:
Ward, p. 107.

[Incident of doctor and canal worker]:
Rudolph J. Vecoli,
The People of New Jersey
(Van Nostrand, 1965), p. 81.

[Swindling of immigrants]:
Nevins, Vol. 2, pp. 282-85.

[Irish in New Jersey]:
Vecoli, passim.

[Competition between Irish and blacks]:
Robert Ernst,
Immigrant Life in New York City
(King’s Crown Press, 1949), pp. 66-68.

[Bellevue]:
Raymond A. Mohl,
Poverty in New York, 1783-1825,
(Oxford University Press, 1971), pp. 84-85.

[Work as deterrent to welfare]: ibid.,
p. 225.

[Mike Walsh and Tammany]:
William V. Shannon,
The American Irish
(Macmillan, 1963), pp. 51-54.
[Walsh on “negro slaves and white wage slaves”]:
quoted in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.,
The Age of Jackson
(Little, Brown, 1945), p. 490.

[Poor whites of the rural South]:
Clement Eaton,
The Growth of Southern Civilization, 1790-1860
(Harper & Row, 1961), pp. 168-76; J. Wayne Flynt,
Dixie’s Forgotten People
(Indiana University Press, 1979).

[Franklin Plummer]:
Reinhard H. Luthin, “Some Demagogues in American History,”
American Historical Review,
Vol. 57, No. 1 (October 1951), pp. 22-46, esp. pp. 25-26; Edwin A. Miles, “Franklin E. Plummer: Piney Woods Spokesman of the Jackson Era,”
Journal of Mississippi History,
Vol. 14 (January 1952), pp. 2-34.

Leaders Without Followers

[Protest of

Unlettered Mechanic”]:
quoted in Howard Zinn,
A People’s History of the United States
(Harper & Row, 1980), p. 216;
[handbill against the “rich”]: ibid.,
p. 218.

[Protest of Sojourner Truth]:
quoted in Schneir, pp. 94-95.

[Lydia Maria Child on drawing up her will]:
Lydia Maria Child to Ellis Gray Loring, Feb. 24, 1856, reprinted in
Letters of Lydia Maria Child
(Houghton Mifflin, 1882).

[Staughton Lynd on the Declaration of Independence]:
Staughton Lynd,
Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism
(Pantheon Books, 1968), p. 4.

[Barrington Moore on the recurring sense of injustice]:
Moore, p. 77.

[Angelina Emily Grimké and Sarah Moore Grimké]:
Gerda Lerner,
The Grimké Sisters from South Carolina
(Houghton Mifflin, 1967); Gilbert H. Barnes and Dwight L. Dumond, eds.,
Letters of Theodore Dwight Weld, Angelina Grimké Weld, and Sarah Grimké, 1822-1844,
2 vols. (Peter Smith, 1965).

[Theodore Weld]:
Benjamin P. Thomas,
Theodore Weld
(Rutgers University Press, 1950).

[Frederick Douglass in the
North Star
on the Seneca Falls convention]:
quoted in Schneir, p. 85.

[Lydia Maria Child on Fanny Kemble and Pierce Butler]:
Lydia Maria Child to Ellis Gray Loring, Dec. 5, 1838, Lydia Maria Child Papers, New York Public Library.

[Exchanges at the Akron meeting]:
Schneir, pp. 93-95.

[Seneca Falls declaration and economic issues]: ibid.,
p. 82.

[FLRA “Factory Tract”]:
reprinted in Vogel, “Their Own Work,” p. 795.

[Frances Wright]:
Perkins and Wolfson; William Randall Waterman, “Frances Wright,”
Studies in History, Economics, and Public Law,
Vol. 115, No. 1 (Columbia University Press, 1924), pp. 92-133: Cecilia Helena Payne-Gaposchkin, “The Nashoba Plan for Removing the Evil of Slavery: Letters of Frances and Camilla Wright, 1820-1829,”
Harvard Library Bulletin,
Vol. 23, No. 3 (July 1975), and No. 4 (October 1975).

12. WHIGS: THE BUSINESS OF POLITICS

[The Whig rally in Dayton]: Ohio State Journal,
Sept. 16, 1840, p. 2; Dayton
Log Cabin,
No. 12, Sept. 18, 1840, p. 1.

[William Henry Harrison’s speech, Dayton, Ohio, Sept. 10, 184o]:
Cincinnati
Gazette,
Sept. 12, 1840; Dayton
Log Cabin,
No. 12, Sept. l8, 1840; text published by the Whig Republican Association, reprinted in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., ed.,
History of American Presidential Elections
(Chelsea House, 1971), Vol. t, pp. 737-44. The version quoted is paraphrased from Schlesinger, pp. 678-79.

[Harrison’s “first presidential campaign speech”]:
Robert Gray Gunderson,
The Log-Cabin Campaign
(University Press of Kentucky, 1957), pp. 164-65.

[John Quincy Adams on “itinerant speech-making”]:
John Quincy Adams,
Memoirs
(Lippincott, 1876), Vol. 10, p. 352, entry for Sept. 24, 1840.

[Invective]:
Schlesinger, pp. 671-74; Gunderson, passim.

[Voter turnout, 1840]:
William Nisbet Chambers, “Election of 1840,” Schlesinger, p. 680; see also William Nisbet Chambers,
Political Parties in a New Nation
(Oxford University Press, 1963), Ch. 1.

The Whig Way of Government

[Harrison’s inaugural]:
Robert Seager II,
And Tyler Too
(McGraw-Hill, 1963), p. 144.

[Harrison’s illness]:
Glyndon G. Van Deusen,
The Jacksonian Era: 1828-1848
(Harper & Brothers, 1959), p. 153.

[Tyler on Whig factions]:
Seager, p. 149.

[Clay’s anger]: ibid.,
p. 134.

[Dilemma of the Whigs in Congress]:
John E. Fisher, “The Dilemma of a States’ Rights Whig,”
Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,
Vol. 81, No. 4 (October 1973), pp.

387-404.

[Ewing’s bank bill]:
Clement Eaton,
Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics
(Little, Brown, 1957), p. 146.
[Clay’s reaction]: ibid.,
p. 147.

[Tyler’s retort to Clay]:
Seager, p. 154.

[“Corporal’s Guard” of Virginians]: ibid,
p. 159.

[Tyler on Clay’s compromise]: ibid,
p. 155.

[Veto celebration and protest]: ibid.,
p. 156.

[Crittenden’s warning]: ibid.,
p. 159.

[Webster and Tyler]:
Van Deusen, p. 159.

[Van Deusen on “logrolling”]: ibid.,
p.

[Tyler welcomes Democratic victory of 1842]:
Seager, p. 171.

[Whigs nominating generals]:
James MacGregor Burns,
The Deadlock of Democracy
(Prentice-Hall, 1963), pp. 60-61.

[Politics of Whiggery]:
William R. Brock,
Parties and Political Conscience: American Dilemmas, 1840-1850,
(KTO Press, 1979); Daniel Walker Howe,
Political Culture of the American Whigs
(University of Chicago Press, 1979); Lynn L. Marshall, “The Strange Stillbirth
of the Whig Party,”
American Historical Review,
Vol. 72, No. 2 (January 1967), pp. 445-68; Sydney Nathans,
Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973)·

[Marshall on Whig nostalgia for a “heroic era” of leadership]:
“Stillbirth of the Whig Party,” p. 463.

The Economics of Whiggery

[Frederic Tudor, the “Ice King”]:
Daniel J. Boorstin,
The Americans: The National Experience
(Random House, 1965), pp. 11-16; Dumas Malone, ed.,
Dictionary of American

Biography
(Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1936), Vol. 19, pp. 47-48.

[Nathan Jarvis Wyeth]:
Boorstin, pp. l3-14.

[Solomon Willard]: ibid,
pp. 18-19;
Dictionary of American Biography,
Vol. 20, pp. 241-42.

[Du Pont Company]:
Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., and Stephen Salsbury,
Pierre S. du Pont and the Making of the Modern Corporation
(Harper & Row, 1971).

[Samuel Finley Morse]: Dictionary of American Biography,
Vol. 13, pp. 247-51.

[Railroad development and leadership]:
Thomas C. Cochran,
Railroad Leaders, 1845-1890: The Business Mind in Action
(Harvard University Press, 1953); Roger Burlingame,
March of the Iron Men
(Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1938); Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., ed.,
The Railroads
(Harcourt, Brace
&
World, 1965).

[Railroad expansion]:
Chandler, p. 13.

[Boston and New York City railroad promoters and magnates]:
Cochran, pp. 263-64.

[Schuyler-Pond exchange]:
Robert Schuyler to Charles F. Pond, Dec. 1, 1848, reprinted in Cochran, p. 457.

[Population growth and economic growth]:
Stuart Bruchey,
The Roots of American Economic Growth, 1607-1861
(Harper & Row, 1965), p. 91.

[Adams on Whigs]:
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.,
The Age of Jackson
(Little, Brown, 1945), p. 279.

[Whigs and economic development]:
Robert Kelley,
The Cultural Pattern of American Politics
(Alfred A. Knopf, 1979), pp. 154-55.

[Hare on unity of interests]:
Schlesinger,
Age of Jackson,
p. 270.

[Everett on “wheel of fortune”]: ibid.,
p. 271.

[Channing on hardships of the rich]: ibid.,
p. 272.

[“Ode to the Factory Girl”]: ibid.

[Channing on “Elevation of Soul”]: ibid.,
p. 273.

[American politics a “romance”]:
Louis Hartz,
The Liberal Tradition in America
(Harcourt, Brace, 1955), p. 140.

[Van Deusen on Ohio Whigs]:
Van Deusen, p. 96.

[Wealth of Boston Whiggery]:
Robert Rich, “ ‘A Wilderness of Whigs’,”
Journal of Social History.
Vol. 4 (Spring 1971), pp. 263-76.

[Justice Story]:
Hartz, p. 104.
[Shaw and “fellow-servant rule”]:
Richard B. Morris, ed.,
Encyclopedia of American History,
rev. ed. (Harper & Brothers, 1961), p. 778.

[Everett on “Numbers against Property”]:
Schlesinger,
Age of Jackson,
p. 110.

Other books

Get Wallace! by Alexander Wilson
The Hunting Trip by William E. Butterworth, III
Sanctuary by Ella Price
Sour Puss by Rita Mae Brown, Michael Gellatly
Tithed by Megan Hart
Misty Moon: Book 1 by Ella Price